Tony Dokoupil
Auteur de The Last Pirate: A Father, His Son, and the Golden Age of Marijuana
1 oeuvres 54 utilisateurs 5 critiques
Œuvres de Tony Dokoupil
Étiqueté
04/14 (1)
2014 (1)
2022 (1)
420 (Biographical) (1)
[ 420 ] (1)
A lire (10)
Années 1970 (1)
Autobiographie (1)
autobiographies and memoirs (1)
Bibliothèque Carnegie de Pittsburg (1)
BIO: AutoBio (1)
Biographie (2)
Biography (Crime) (1)
boîte 4 (1)
Club de lecture (1)
Contrebande (1)
Countries: USA (1)
Crime (1)
Drogues (2)
drug addiction (1)
drug war (1)
Floride (1)
I-read (1)
Journalistes (1)
June 2014 (1)
Kindle (1)
Livre électronique (1)
Lu (2)
Lu en 2015 (1)
Marijuana (3)
May 2014 (1)
Mémoires (3)
non-fiction (6)
Shelfari_import (1)
the 70's (1)
to-read-non-fiction (1)
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Membres
Critiques
The Last Pirate: A Father, His Son, and the Golden… par Tony Dokoupil
… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
daltonlp | 4 autres critiques | Dec 15, 2020 | An interesting biography, it was well written and compelling. The author dipped into meloncholy a little now and then, and I found the story jumped back and forth through time a little too much for my taste.
Signalé
klnbennett | 4 autres critiques | Oct 7, 2020 | This is a good, but not great book. The part that stuck with me was the flip side of the con. The movies, TV and media would have you believe in the glam and glitz of the smuggler. However the people at the heart of the business are not the happy go lucky Robin Hood types who are righteous in their aims to sell a harmless plant and advance the consciousness of the world. The reality of the situation is much different. This book is mostly a memoir about a boy and his father and the boy's search for an understanding about why his father caused such destruction in his life. The book holds your attention and is well written.… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
ktp50 | 4 autres critiques | Aug 8, 2014 | This memoir of “a father, his son, and the golden age of marijuana” promised to be interesting, and it was to an extent. I was completely unaware of Tony Dokoupil, the big-time dope dealer, until I heard of this book. Apparently, lots of stoners were eventually recipients of their share of the tons of weed this dealer was responsible for getting to the country.
To me, the family dynamics of the book was the most interesting part. Multiple generations of abusive fathers raising sons who in turn became abusive, until the author made a conscious decision to break the chain.
Many of the dealers lived by a romanticized “pirate code,” and some ultimately broke that code. The dealer who felt above the fray because he dealt in pot rather than the harder drugs could not resist those harder drugs. He set himself up perfectly for self-destruction. Did he ultimately self-destruct? I'm not telling, but the book will.
The author did tend to over-romanticize much of the story. Sure, parts of it were gritty, but the whole noble undertaking slant got a little old. Some of the writing dragged a bit, and there were a few too many similes, but some of the writing made me smile.
“It helped that he was good-looking, too, with a wide, eager face like a Labrador. In the months to come, she'd realize he also had a Lab's tendency to run off and return sparkly eyes and dirty, radiating love-me-anyway charm.”
About a family member, he writes,
“Once you point a gun at your family, you can lower the barrel, wrap the weapon in blankets, and throw it in the swamp, but you can never get rid of it. The gun is pointed forever.”
The story is interesting, the book is good but not great, and I am glad that I read it, just wish it had managed to be a little less wordy in its telling.
I was given an advance copy for review. The quotes may have changed in the published edition.… (plus d'informations)
To me, the family dynamics of the book was the most interesting part. Multiple generations of abusive fathers raising sons who in turn became abusive, until the author made a conscious decision to break the chain.
Many of the dealers lived by a romanticized “pirate code,” and some ultimately broke that code. The dealer who felt above the fray because he dealt in pot rather than the harder drugs could not resist those harder drugs. He set himself up perfectly for self-destruction. Did he ultimately self-destruct? I'm not telling, but the book will.
The author did tend to over-romanticize much of the story. Sure, parts of it were gritty, but the whole noble undertaking slant got a little old. Some of the writing dragged a bit, and there were a few too many similes, but some of the writing made me smile.
“It helped that he was good-looking, too, with a wide, eager face like a Labrador. In the months to come, she'd realize he also had a Lab's tendency to run off and return sparkly eyes and dirty, radiating love-me-anyway charm.”
About a family member, he writes,
“Once you point a gun at your family, you can lower the barrel, wrap the weapon in blankets, and throw it in the swamp, but you can never get rid of it. The gun is pointed forever.”
The story is interesting, the book is good but not great, and I am glad that I read it, just wish it had managed to be a little less wordy in its telling.
I was given an advance copy for review. The quotes may have changed in the published edition.… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
TooBusyReading | 4 autres critiques | May 22, 2014 | Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 1
- Membres
- 54
- Popularité
- #299,230
- Évaluation
- ½ 3.5
- Critiques
- 5
- ISBN
- 5